Below is a general list of some of the pests we control (Also
see Animal Control).
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Ants |
Hornets |
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Bed
Bugs |
Mice |
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Bees |
Millipedes |
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Beetles |
Moths |
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Carpenter
Ants |
Mosquitoes |
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Cave
Crickets |
Rodents |
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Centipedes |
Silverfish |
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Clover
Mites |
Termites |
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Cockroaches |
Ticks |
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Dust
Mites |
Wasps |
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Earwigs |
Waterbugs |
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Fleas |
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Pest Management:
Pests will be managed to:
- Reduce any potential human health hazard or to protect against
a significant threat to public safety
- Prevent loss or damage to property
- Prevent pests from spreading in the community or to plant
and animal populations beyond the site.
- Enhance the quality of life for residents, students and/or
employees.
Integrated Pest
Management Procedures:
IPM procedures will determine when to control pests, and whether
to use physical, horticultural, or biological means. Chemical
controls are used as a last resort. IPM practitioners depend
on current, comprehensive information on the pest and its
environment, and the best available pest control methods.
Applying IPM principles prevents unacceptable levels of pest
activity and damage. These principles are implemented by the
most economical means and with the least possible hazard to
people, property, and the environment. For example, we only
use tamper proof rodent stations as required by the state
government.
It is the policy of Emergency Pest Control
to utilize IPM principles to manage pest populations adequately.
While the goal of this IPM program is to reduce and ultimately
eliminate use of toxic chemicals, toxic chemicals may become
necessary in certain situations. The choice of using a pesticide
will be based on a review of all other available options and
a determination that these options are unacceptable or are
infeasible, alone or in combination. Cost or staffing considerations
alone will not be adequate justification for use of chemical
control agents. The full range of alternatives, including
no action, will be considered.
Hot Topics
Lyme disease risk
The single most significant carrier of Lyme disease lurks
not in deep, dark forests, but in parks, on farms and even
in the tall grass of suburban backyards. That carrier –
the one most likely to bring Lyme-infected ticks in contact
with human beings- is not the white-tailed deer, but the white
footed mouse, according to doctors at the University of Medicine
and Dentistry of New Jersey. A three-year UMDNJ study has
found that recognizing and avoiding the habitat of the rodents
can significantly reduce the risk of contracting the tick-borne
illness.
There is a misconception among most people that deer are the
culprit. But no; it’s really the mice.
Roaches:
You’ll rarely find Roaches distributed evenly in an
infested office/apartment building. Some units might be heavily
infested, while other tenants may not have seen a roach in
years. Apartments/offices that are clean, uncluttered, well
maintained, and treated regularly can still be heavily infested.
What ?!
One or more units in a building are often the
“Focus” of the infestation. These focus apartments/office/classrooms
have conditions ideal for roaches…abundant food, water,
and especially shelter… and overflow populations keep
re-infesting the apartments, offices or classrooms next door,
above or below. There’s little you can do to stem the
tide without first identifying these focus apartments, offices
and/or classrooms (Usually fairly east), and then treating
them (often difficult).
The Profile of
a Problem
Poor Cooperation. Tenants
of problem units usually refuse to allow pest control service.
(If the apartments next door have been regularly treated,
are clean and uncluttered but remain infested, it’s
a good bet that you’ve found the problem).
Clutter. Stacks of boxes,
bags, food, clothing, and other items will be jammed into
corners or scattered on the floor throughout the unit. (Harborage
for roaches).
Poor Sanitation. The
stove in the kitchen, cafeteria or efficiency will be covered
with caked-on grease, there will be food scraps on the floor,
the trash will be overflowing, and dirty dishes will be piled
in the sink and on countertops. (Food and water for roaches).
High Temperatures. The
average room temperature will be 80º F or higher. (In
30 days, twice as many roaches will hatch out at 83 degrees
that at 73º F.
Roaches. Naturally,
a focus unit will have roaches, roaches, and more roaches.
A shot of flushing agent under the kitchen sink or behind
a cabinet should confirm your suspicions.